David J. Meyers
David Meyers has been practicing with Rinke Noonan since 1988 in the areas of real estate and construction law.
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A Worthington native, David graduated from the University of Minnesota and received his law degree in 1983, cum laude, from William Mitchell College of Law.
David is certified as a Real Property Law Specialist by the Minnesota State Bar Association. He is a former president of the Builders Association of Minnesota. He is a member of the Complex Construction and Commercial Arbitration Panels of the American Arbitration Association. David has served as an arbitrator on several arbitration panels involving many millions of dollars of claims many of which he has chaired.
He is a certified continuing education instructor for the Minnesota State Builder Licensing program. David regularly represents builders, subcontractors, consumers, and title insurance companies in construction disputes. In 2004, he was inducted into the Minnesota Builder's Association Hall of Fame.
David is a AV rated attorney by the Martindale Hubbell Rating Service.
A substantial part of David's practice involves arbitrating construction and commercial cases. He is certified as a Qualified Neutral by the Minnesota Supreme Court.
David also advises governments and land owners on land use and zoning matters. He has also worked with Counties and Town Boards on Cartways and protecting road rights of way.
In 2002, he was appointed Examiner of Titles for Sherburne County by the judges of the Tenth Minnesota Judicial District. In 2006, he was appointed Deputy Examiner of Titles for Stearns and Benton Counties.
David is a trustee of the Stearns County Law Library.
Education:
William Mitchell College of Law (J.D., cum laude, 1983)
University of Minnesota (B.A., 1978)
Bar Admissions:
Minnesota, 1983
Wisconsin, 1983
U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota, 1983
U.S. District Court, Western District of Wisconsin, 1983
Articles:
Notice & Opportunity to Cure
Supreme Court Clears the Way for Residential Building Construction Companies to Dissolve and Avoid Continuing Liability
Unlicensed Builders are Still a Problem
Court Rules that Money Paid to a Subcontract Belongs to the Bank, and Not the Sub-Subcontractor
Building Homes just got a Whole Lot More Risky after the Supreme Court Changes the Rules
The Builder's Option when a Subcontractor Files an Invalid Mechanic's Lien
Builder's Wife May Lose Home because the Builder did not Pay a Disgruntled Home Owner
Early Start; Or the Mortgage Versus Mechanic's Lien Priority Question
Subcontractor Bill of Rights
60-Day Rule does not Apply to Building Permits
Violation of the Building Code is a Crime
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